Romolo Nottaris | |
Full Name: | Romolo Nottaris |
Main Discipline: | Mountaineering |
Other Discipline: | Documentary filmmaker, expedition leader, mountain sports shoe designer |
Birth Date: | September 7, 1946 |
Birth Place: | Lugano, Switzerland |
Nationality: | Swiss |
Notable Ascents: | Summits of Gasherbrum II and Makalu, alpine style |
Romolo Nottaris (born July 9, 1946 in Lugano, Switzerland) is a Swiss rock climber, mountaineer and documentary filmmaker. He was the first Swiss to climb an eight-thousander in alpine style, without supplementary oxygen, sherpas or fixed ropes.[1]
Nottaris was born in Lugano in 1946, the third of four children of a warehouse worker and housewife. His family loved the mountains and outdoors, and was introduced to the mountains at the age of six. At 14 he began guiding in the Alps,[2] and later was a professional poker player in Geneva.[3]
In the 1970s, Nottaris began collaborating with Radiotelevisione svizzera to create climbing documentaries. He would go on to make over twenty documentary films, covering expeditions to the Himalayas, Patagonia, Alaska and Antarctica.[4]
In 1971 he was the only survivor of an avalanche on Mont Blanc, an experience which seriously affected him. He then turned to climbing in South America, making summits of Aconcagua, Chopicalqui and Huascaran.
In 1978, Nottaris organized the first expedition from Ticino to the Himalaya. He returned several times to the Himalayas, and in particular with Erhard Loretan and Jean Troillet. That year he would climb Pumori (7,161m).
Romolo Nottaris is an adherent of the "Alpine style" of mountaineering (i.e climbing without high altitude porters, fixed ropes and oxygen masks). He would be the first Swiss climb an eight-thousander in alpine style,[5] when he summited Gasherbrum II alongside Tiziano Zünd in 1981.[6]
In 1984, he summitted Makalu in alpine style.[7] [8]
Apart from the Himalayas, Nottaris has organized expeditions in Alaska, Patagonia, and Antarctica. In 2007, he led an expedition to the virgin peak, Mount Stanley in South Georgia.[9]
In 2006, he was part of a rescue operation to find Swiss mountaineer Franco Dellatorre, who went missing while climbing in Patagonia.[10]
In 2021, the camera was turned on the documentary filmmaker, as Nottaris filmed Walking on the Peaks/In cammino sulle creste, a thirteen episode documentary where he guided eight young people on a 140 km alpine trek.[11] The series was later made available in new markets when it was picked up by Amazon Prime and Apple TV.[12]
In 2024, he was part of another documentary series, Da Paese che vai alla Via Crio highlighting over twenty years of mountaineering public broadcasting.[13]
Nottaris has completed the following expeditions:[14]
In 1978, he founded "New Rock", a trading company for mountain equipment. He was the first in Switzerland to secure the exclusive distribution of Scarpa mountain boots.[19] His partnership with Scarpa turned into a collaboration, with Nottaris developing new designs for the company, including footwear for paragliding, and ski touring.
He would later go on to develop a new company, "Alpine Style" with his son Daniele. In 1993, he helped Scarpa develop the Denali ski and expedition boot.[20] With the profits of this company, Nottaris financed his expeditions and sponsored other mountaineers like Ueli Steck[21] and the Anthamatten brothers.
In 2023, Nottaris launched Uvarara, a wine company.[22]